Thietmar

German bishop
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Also known as: Dietmar, Dithmar
Quick Facts
Also spelled:
Dietmar or Dithmar
Born:
July 25, 975, Hildesheim, Saxony [Germany]
Died:
Dec. 1, 1018, Merseburg, March of Thuringia (aged 43)
Also Known As:
Dithmar
Dietmar
Subjects Of Study:
Germany
Holy Roman Empire

Thietmar (born July 25, 975, Hildesheim, Saxony [Germany]—died Dec. 1, 1018, Merseburg, March of Thuringia) was the bishop of Merseburg and chronicler whose history of the three Ottos and Henry II, Saxon kings of Germany and Holy Roman emperors, is an important medieval Saxon document.

The son of John Siegfried, Graf von Walbeck, and a relative of the royal house, Thietmar spent his youth in Magdeburg, joined the brotherhood of the church of Magdeburg in 991, was made prior of the convent of Walbeck in 1002, and became bishop of Merseburg seven years later. Between 1012 and 1018 he wrote an eight-book chronicle based on German annals from 908 to 1018. Having accompanied Henry II on military expeditions against the Slavs, he attributed to him the recovery of Saxon lands from the Slavic peoples. He was one of the first scholars to employ the word Teutonici to distinguish the German people from non-Germans within the Holy Roman Empire and to develop a vague concept of imperialism in contrast to traditional tribalism.

This article was most recently revised and updated by Encyclopaedia Britannica.